Pipeline Politics: The Complex Political Economy of East-West Energy Trade 9781501744518

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Pipeline Politics: The Complex Political Economy of East-West Energy Trade
 9781501744518

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Pipeline Politics

Cornell Studies in Political Economy EDITED

By

PETER

J.

KATZENSTEIN

Politics in Hard Times: Comparative Responses to International Economic Crises, by Peter Gourevitch Closing the Gold Window: Domestic Politics and the'End of Bretton Woods, by Joanne Gowa Pipeline Politics: The Complex Political Economy of East-West Energy Trade, by Bruce W. Jentleson The Politics of International Debt, edited by Miles Kahler Corporatism and Change: Austria, Switzerland, and the Politics of Industry, by Peter J. Katzenstein Small States in World Markets: Industrial Policy in Europe, by Peter Katzenstein

J.

International Regimes, edited by Stephen D. Krasner Europe and the New Technologies, edited by Margaret Sharp Europe's Industries: Public and Private Strategies for Change, edited by Geoffrey Shepherd, Franc;ois Duchene, and Christopher Saunders National Styles of Regulation: Environmental Policy in Great Britain and the United States, by David Vogel Governments, Markets, and Growth: Financial Systems and the Politics of Industrial Change, by John Zysman American Industry in International Competition: Government Policies and Corporate Strategies, edited by John Zysman and Laura Tyson

Pipeline Politics THE CoMPLEX PoLITICAL EcoNOMY OF EAST-WEST ENERGY TRADE

BRUCE

w.

jENTLESON

CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS

Ithaca and London

Copyright © 1986 by Cornell University All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, 124 Roberts Place, Ithfica, New York 14850. First published 1986 by Cornell University Press. International Standard Book Number o-8014-1923-9 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 86-47643 Librarians: Library of Congress cataloging inforrrw,tion appears on the last page of the book. The paper in this book is acid-free and meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.

To my parents, and to Barbara

Contents

Preface Abbreviations

ll

15

l. The Constraints on America's Economic Coercive Power 2. The Onset of the Cold War and East-West Trade Controls, 1945-1953 3· The Growth of East-West Oil Trade, 1954-1962 4· The Oil Trade Sanctions of 1962-1963 5· Energy Trade and Detente in the 1970s 6. The Reagan Administration's Sanctions against the Siberian Natural Gas Pipeline, 1981-1984 7· The Complex Political Economy of East-West Energy Trade

Bibliography Index

19 51 76 107 132 172 215 247 257

7

Tables l.l. Macroeconomic indicators, United States, 1945-1983 2.1. Value of all American exports to the Soviet Union and exports of indirect military significance, 1945-1953 2.2. Value of total trade, United States and Western Europe with the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, 1938 2-3· Commodity composition (selected) of Western European trade with the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, 1938 2-4· Value of exports from European COCOM countries to the Soviet Union, 1948-1953 2-5· Value of selected commodities exported from European COCOM countries to the Soviet Union, 1948-1953 2.6. Percentage of total international trade of seven Eastern bloc countries represented by intrabloc trade, 1938, 1948, and 1953 Number of export items on COCOM lists before and 3·1. after revisions of August 15, 1954 3·2· Number of export items on COCOM lists before and after revisions of August 15, 1954, and percentage of items decontrolled, by product category 3·3· Number of export items on COCOM List 1 in four categories of action as recommended by the United States and as adopted by COCOM, 1954 3+ Volume of wide-diameter pipe imported by the Soviet Union from principal suppliers, 1958-1962 Volume of Soviet crude oil imported by five COCOM 3·5· nations, 1950-1962

9

49 56 64 64 68 69 71 76 77 78 88 91

TABLES

4·1. Volume and growth rate of Italian imports of Soviet oil, 1957-1965 5·1. Western Siberian oil and natural gas production, 1970, and Ninth Five-Year Plan targets, 1975 5·2· Value of major contracts for exports of U.S. energy equipment to the USSR, 1972-73, by firm 5·3· Major technical and economic cooperation agreements between U.S. firms and the USSR, 1972-73 5-4- Details of North Star and Yakutsk natural gas projects, as proposed in 1973-74 5·5· Value of exports to the Soviet Union from the United States and four European COCOM countries, 19711980 s.6. Volume of Soviet oil imported by three European COCOM countries and percentage of total oil consumed, 1973, 1975, and 1980 5·7· Volume of Soviet natural gas imported by four European COCOM countries and percentage of total natural gas consumed, 1973, 1975, and 1980 s.8. Percentage of energy consumed and imported by four European COCOM countries represented by OPEC oil, 1978 5·9· Percentage of natural gas requirements of three European COCOM countries supplied by European and other sources, 1980 and 1990 (projected) 6.1. Volume and percentage of natural gas imported from the Soviet Union by three European COCOM countries, 1980, and projected for import via Siberian pipeline, 1990 6.2. Macroeconomic indicators, four European COCOM countries, 1978 and 1982 6.3. Value of major contracts for exports of energy equipment and technology by European COCOM firms to the USSR, November 1982-March 1983 6+ Volume of natural gas imported from all sources by three European COCOM countries, 1980 and 1982 Percentage of respondents in four European COCOM 7·1. countries indicating degrees of respect for and confidence in the United States, 1972 and 1981 7.2. Percentage of U.S. respondents who approved President Reagan's overall job performance and handling of foreign policy, February 1981-September 1984 10

113 137 139 140 141 160

163 165 167 168

186 188 198 201 230

238

Preface

This book has three principal objectives (and thus, I hope, three principal values to its readers). Its primary objective is to examine an important issue in American foreign policy: should the United States and its NATO allies trade with the Soviet Union, and if so, in which economic sectors and under what conditions? Since the mid-tgsos, trade in the energy sector-that is, the West's imports of Soviet oil and natural gas and its exports of energy-related equipment and technology to the Soviet Union-has been especially controversial. The complexities of this issue were underlined rather dramatically by the controversy surrounding the Siberian natural gas pipeline of 1981-82. But as this book shows, by then the issue of East-West energy trade already had a long history. A similar dispute had simmered in the 1950s and surfaced in the tg6os. Then in the 1970s, as a function of both the world energy crisis and the rise and demise of detente, East-West energy trade took on even greater importance and became even more controversial. And while the Siberian gas pipeline issue itself subsided, the basic questions it posed are likely to continue to be of central importance to American foreign policy for the foreseeable future. Second, and at a more analytic level, this book bears upon two of political science's most fundamental questions: What constitutes power? and How is influence achieved? Stripped to its basics, EastWest trade in energy and its technology is a case of one nation-state attempting to wield its power to influence another. In this respect its implications proceed outward in a series of concentric circles, first to East-West trade in other sectors, then to other cases of international economic sanctions, and ultimately to a more general concern with power and influence in international relations. I do not at all claim II

PREFACE

that the lessons of this case are totally generalizable (a point discussed in more detail in Chapters 1 and 7), but I do believe that the findings presented here, and especially the framework I develop for analyzing the variables that affect the exercise of economic coercive power, have significance beyond the case of the Siberian pipeline. Finally, this book attempts to fill a void in the body of literature now commonly categorized as international political economy. In my view the two most important developments in the scholarship of international relations in the 1970s were the rediscovery of the interrelationship of politics and economics ("political economy" is a nineteentn-century term) and the growing recognition of the interaction of the international and domestic levels of analysis. Most of the work that has been done along these lines, however, has focused on West-West or North-South relations. Almost by default East-West issues have rdnained largely the province of more traditional "realist" approaches. Yet East-West issues are sufficiently complex to require conceptualization in political economy terms. Such an exercise not only improves our understanding of East-West relations but also contributes to the development of more general theories of international political economy. Chapter 1 sets forth the conceptual framework for my analysis of the politics of East-West energy trade. Chapter 2 examines EastWest trade generally in the early Cold War period (1945-53), makes an initial application of the analytic framework developed in Chapter 1, and assesses the impact of sanctions on the Soviet Union during this period. Chapter 3 focuses on the first period of growing East-West energy trade in the mid-1950s. Chapter 4 analyzes the 1962-63 oil trade sanctions, their multidimensional politics, and their policy consequences. Chapter 5 discusses the development of East-West trade in oil and (increasingly) natural gas in the 1970s. Chapter 6 takes a detailed look at the Western alliance and American domestic politics of the Reagan administration's sanctions against the Siberian natural gas pipeline and the relationship between their intended and actual consequences. The concluding chapter reassesses the arguments put forward in Chapter 1 in light of the evidence provided in the intervening chapters and offers some final thoughts on the theoretical as well as the policy implications of the East-West energy trade issue. Many people have contributed in many ways to my work on this book. I am privileged to have had the guidance of Theodore Lowi, Walter LaFeber, and Arch Dotson, whose criticism, ideas, and examples have been of immense value to me. I especially want to thank 12

Preface

Peter Katzenstein, who in so many ways has stimulated my intellectual growth and development. I also thank Ariel Levite for cheerfully serving as a sounding board for my ideas. My work at Cornell University was supported by a fellowship from the Institute for the Study of World Politics. I have since received generous financial support from Junior Faculty Research Fellowships and Faculty Development Grants of the University of California, Davis, from the UC Davis Institute on Governmental Affairs, from the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, and from the American Council of Learned Societies. My department chairman, Randolph Siverson, has been especially supportive of my work. My·colleagues Larry Berman, Alexander Groth, and Donald Rothchild offered useful critiques of parts of earlier versions of the manuscript, as have Gary Bertsch of the University of Georgia and three anonymous reviewers for Cornell University Press. At the Press, Walter Lippincott and Peter Agree were very helpful and supportive, and Barbara Salazar was a thoughtful and thorough editor. Thanks also to my research assistants, Valerie Wiswell and Yu Yee, and to Paul Surovell, whose Interflo greatly facilitated our research. Jill Warner, Gertrude Fitzpatrick, Brenda Petersen, and Eunice Carlson all were conscientious typists and patient with my penchant for "one more" set of revisions. I also thank Charlyn Fishman, who assisted with the index, and Micki Eagle, who helped with the proofreading and in a number of other ways. Finally, I am especially grateful to my son, Adam, who got to hear quite a bit about East-West energy trade on those cold nights in Ithaca; to my daughter, Kate, who has received her dosage more recently; and to my parents, Ted and Elaine, and my wife and friend, Barbara, whose roles in any success that I may achieve should not be underestimated and are never unappreciated, and to whom this book is dedicated. Portions of this book have been adapted from three of my recent articles in Will Europe Fight for Oil?, edited by Robert J. Lieber (New York: Praeger, 1983); International Organization (Autumn 1984); and Millennium: Journal of International Studies (Spring 1986). BRUCE

w. JENTLESON

Davis, California

13

Abbreviations

bcf bern CDU CFP CIA COCOM COMECON EC ECE EEC ENI FDP FOP FRUS

lEA IGP IL LNG mbd MFN mmt MNC NAM NATO NPC NSC

billions of cubic feet billions of cubic meters Christian Democratic Party (West Germany) Compagnie Franc;aise des Petroles Central Intelligence Agency Consultative Group-Coordinating Committee Council for Mutual Economic Assistance European Community Economic Commission for Europe European Economic Community Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi Free Democratic Party (West Germany) Friendship Oil Pipeline Foreign Relations of the United States (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1948-so) International Energy Agency Investment Guaranty Program International List liquefied natural gas millions of barrels per day most favored nation millions of metric tons multinational corporation National Association of Manufacturers North Atlantic Treaty Organization National Petroleum Council National Security Council

15

ABBREVIATIONS

OECD OEEC OPEC OTA PDC SNGP SONJ SPD

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Organization for European Economic Cooperation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Office of Technology Assessment Christian Democratic Party (Italy) Siberian natural gas pipeline Standard Oil of New Jersey Social Democratic Party (West Germany)

Pipeline Politics

CHAPTER ONE

The Constraints on America's Economic Coercive Power

PIPELINE POLITICS: AN OVERVIEW

"We believe," Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Perle stated in a November 1g81 congressional hearing on the Siberian natural gas pipeline (SNGP), 1 "that the increasing dependence of our European allies on Soviet energy, and especially natural gas, will weaken the alliance politically and militarily." The estimated $10 billion to be spent by Western Europe to import Soviet natural gas "will finance ... the modernization of the Soviet military and industrial establishment." Moreover, with Western Europe so heavily dependent on the Soviet Union for such a vital commodity, the Soviets will know that "in a crisis [they] might interrupt the flow of gas to achieve political purposes." Finally, and perhaps most threatening, "day to day influence ... must flow like the gas itself. ... Whether one calls it sensitivity or solicitousness or simply 'reality,' is there any doubt that our allies listen more carefully to kings and rulers who supply them with energy than to those who do not?" 2 1This pipeline has been given many names. It originally was called the Yamburg pipeline, for the supergiant gasfield north of the Arctic Circle from which the gas was supposed to come. When problems delayed the development of this field, the already producing Urengoi field (150 miles to the south, and the world's largest gasfield) was tapped instead, and the pipeline began to be referred to as the Yamal pipeline, for the region in which the Urengoi field was located. It has also been called the Soviet-West European gas pipeline, the West Siberian natural gas pipeline, the Trans-Siberian natural gas pipeline, and undoubtedly numerous other names. For simplicity's sake I shall refer to it as the Siberian natural gas pipeline. 2 Testimony before U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, Proposed Trans-Siberian Natural Gas Pipeline: Hearings, 97th Cong., 1st sess., 1981, pp. 113-17.

PIPELINE PoLITICS

A month later, spurred by what he termed the Kremlin's "heavy and direct responsibility" for the imposition of martial law in Poland, President Ronald Reagan embargoed all American exports of energy equipment and technology to the Soviet Union. 3 For the next six months concerted efforts were made to persuade the European allies both to join the export embargo and to abandon their plans to increase their imports of Soviet gas. When these diplomatic efforts proved futile, the administration made the rather undiplomatic decision to try to force the allies to comply with its energy trade sanctions. On June 18, 1982, President Reagan announced that the United States was claiming extraterritorial application of its export controls to the European subsidiaries of American corporations, to those European compar\ies producing under license from American firms, and to European companies using American-made parts. As he originally had done back in December, the president again stressed "our objective of reconciliation in Poland." Such rhetoric aside, it was quite clear that the American objectives ran much deeper than responding to events in Poland and were better reflected in Assistant Secretary Perle's earlier delineation of the political and strategic dangers considered inherent in East-West energy trade. Western European leaders were no less blunt than Perle had been in expressing their disagreement with this analysis, its assumptions, and its implications. French Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson spoke of a "progressive divorce" within the alliance because "we no longer speak the same language." West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt defiantly pledged that "the pipeline will be built." Even Conservative British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher retorted that the real issue was "whether one very powerful nation can prevent existing contracts 3In July 1978, in response to the imprisonment of the Soviet dissidents Anatoly Shcharansky and Aleksandr Ginzburg, the Carter administration had imposed controls on exports of technology and equipment related to exploration for and production of oil and gas. Two months later it loosened the policy but kept the licensing requirement on the books. On December 29, 1981, the Reagan administration broadened the licensing requirement to include the export of equipment used in the refining and transmission of oil and gas (e.g., pipelayers, pipeline compressor stations). Even more to the point, while claiming that licensing applications would continue to be considered case by case, as a matter of policy the Reagan administration adopted a presumption of disapproval on all energy-related exports. The December 29 sanctions also banned the export of electronic equipment, computers, and other high technology to the Soviet Union; closed the Soviet Purchasing Commission; suspended Aeroflot service to U.S. airports; suspended negotiations for a new maritime agreement and strengthened controls governing access to ports; let exchange agreements lapse, including the agreements on energy and science and technology; and postponed negotiations for a new long-term grain agreement (this sanction later was the first to be lifted). 20

The Constraints on America's Economic Coercive Power

from being fulfilled." 4 Across the European political spectrum opposition parties sided with their partisan foes and against the American sanctions. This was one of the very few issues on which the conservative French leaders Raymond Barre and Valery Giscard d'Estaing endorsed a policy of Fraw,:ois Mitterrand. It also was a rare common ground for Labourites, Social Democrats, and Conservatives in Britain. And when Christian Democrat Helmut Kohl was elected the new West German chancellor, he immediately stated his intention to honor Social Democrat Schmidt's pledge that the pipeline would be built. 5 The more the Reagan administration increased the pressure, the more steadfast the European governments became. On August 25 the French firms Dresser France and Creusot Loire went ahead and exported to the Soviet Union the first three turbine-powered compressor stations containing parts of American origin and made under license from American firms. Instantly the Reagan administration retaliated as it threatened to do by issuing an order prohibiting any and all American exports to these offending companies. A week later the Italian firm Nuovo Pignone sent its pipeline compressors on their way. The Reagan administration again retaliated with countersanctions. Next to ship was Britain's John Brown Engineering. American countersanctions again followed. Then the West German firms AEGKanis Turbinenfabrik and Mannesmann Anlagenbau; and again, as threatened, the punishment. 6 Clearly, this was not the way allies were supposed to act toward one another. What made the intensity of this intra-alliance conflict over the SNGP even more striking was its contrast with the intra-alliance solidarity being exhibited at virtually the same moment on other major issues. Despite even more intense domestic opposition, for example, these same European governments stood firmly by their commitment to deploy a new generation of intermediate-range nuclear missiles on their soil. The same American president who was excori4 Newsweek, August 2, 1982, p. 37; Economist, June 26, 1982, pp. 52-53; New York Times, July 2, 1982, pp. AI, A4. 5 Wall Street journal, July 23, 1982, p. 20; New York Times, October 5· 1982, p. 6.

6These sanctions were narrower in scope, limited to oil and gas equipment, services, and technology. The purpose, according to Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge, was to avoid "unduly harming our allies and friends" while still "fully maintaining the goals laid out by the President." Baldridge also announced that the more comprehensive counterembargo against Dresser France and Creusot Loire was being reduced accordingly. The counterembargoes that followed against John Brown Engineering, AEG-Kanis; and Mannesmann also were limited to oil- and gas-related exports (Office of the Secretary, press releases of August 26, September 4, September 28, and October 5· 1982). 21

PIPELINE POLITICS

ated for his penchant for economic warfare was praised for his resolute leadership in reinvigorating the Western military posture. Similarly, there also was a great degree of alliance collaboration on the even more closely related issue of firming up controls on East-West high-technology trade. In January 1982 the first high-level review of the COCOM embargo lists in twenty-four years was held (COCOM is the acronym for Consultative Group-Coordinating Committee, the multilateral organization created in 1949 as the basis for collective Western trade controls). While not all the American proposals for expanded high-technology controls ended up by being accepted, in contrast to the dispute over energy trade, most were. 7 The accompanying rhetoric was like night and day; even a senior Pentagon official remarked, "We're pleased with it [the new COCOM agreement] ... it gives us protection on the really critical items." 8 Why, then, did the East-West energy trade issue prove so contentious? The answer to this question begins with acknowledgment that this issue historically has been a recurring source of intra-alliance tensions. In fact, there are quite pointed parallels between the 198182 SNGP dispute and the earlier 1962-63 controversy over the "Friendship" oil pipeline (FOP). 9 Then the issues involved the increases in imports of Soviet oil, especially by Italy, where the Soviet market share had gone over 20 percent, and in exports of widediameter pipe, especially by West Germany, which had become the source of 87 percent of the Soviet supply. The Kennedy administration's concerns then were analogous to those of the Reagan administration twenty years later. The FOP would make possible a significiant increase in Soviet hard-currency earnings. It would increase the risk that American allies might become too dependent on Soviet oil, as Italy was already feared to be. And even more than the natural gas pipeline, the FOP had military uses (e.g., logistical support for forward-based troops) that could affect the already tenuous military balance in Central Europe. A second point, and a major difference between the two pipeline 7American Metal Market, April 16, 1984, p. 1; Aviation Week and Space Technology, July 23, 1984, p. 21. On this point see also Beverly Crawford and Stefanie Lenway, "Decision Modes and International Regime Change: Western Collaboration on East-West Trade," World Politics 37 (April 1985): 375-402, and Michael Mastanduno, "Strategies of Economic Containment: U.S. Trade Relations with the Soviet Union," World Politics 37 (July 1985): 503-31. 8Wall Street journal, July 17, 1984, p. 35· 9for an earlier comparison of these two cases, see my "Khrushchev's Oil and Brezhnev's Natural Gas Pipelines," in Will Europe Fight for Oil? Energy Relations in the Atlantic Area, ed. Robert J. Lieber (New York: Praeger, 1983), pp. 33-69.

22

The Constraints on America's Economic Coercive Power

cases, is that the United States was able to exert much more leverage over its allies' policies in the 196os than in the 198os. While not going to the extreme of boycotting Soviet oil, Italy did end up reducing its imports to 10 percent of total oil consumption, well below the level that could be considered politically precarious. West Germany, initially reluctant to join the pipe embargo, eventually went so far as to annul existing contracts on which delivery was pending. In 1982, however, it was the United States that was forced to give the most ground. As we shall see in more detail in Chapter 6, what the Reagan administration billed as a compromise agreement, under which the American countersanctions were lifted in exchange for European agreement to a series of joint studies of the issue, in reality was a major American concession. The Western Europeans not only fulfilled their original export contracts for the Siberian pipeline but went on to sign numerous new contracts totaling billions of dollars for this and other Soviet energy projects. And while actual Western European imports of Soviet gas increased less rapidly than had originally been planned, they nevertheless increased more than the United States wanted. Moreover, the factors limiting the gas import increases had more to do with falling world oil market conditions than with the politico-strategic imperatives being pushed by the United States. Two interrelated questions therefore need to be addressed: What have been the sources of Western alliance conflict over East-West energy trade? And why has American leverage over its allies' policies weakened over time? A second set of questions relates to the American domestic politics of the Soviet energy trade issue. For almost a quarter century following World War II there was solid consensual backing in the United States for anti-Soviet sanctions of any kind. It didn't seem to matter that passage of the Export Control Act of 1949 marked the first time in the history of the United States that export controls had been authorized in peacetime over anything more than munitions and weapons-manufacturing technology. Or that, as two legal scholars later concluded, "no single piece of legislation gives more power to the President to control American commerce." 10 In fact, the only significant congressional opposition in the 1950s and early 196os came when presidents were deemed to be too lax in enforcing export controls. There even were instances (as Chapter 4 will show in regard 10 Harold J. Berman and John R. Garson, "United States Export Controls: Past, Present, and Future," Columbia Law Review 67 (1967): 792.

2J

PIPELINE POLITICS

to the role of Standard Oil of New Jersey and other major oil companies in the Friendship oil pipeline case) when private interest groups not only supported but abetted the sanctions policy. The major shift in American policy came in 1971-72, when, as part of its overall detente strategy, the Nixon administration liberalized trade controls in the energy sector (as well as in other sectors, notably grain) as an inducement for Soviet political cooperation. The administration even went so far as to offer export credits and otherwise to promote two long-term, multibillion-dollar projects between American corporate consortiums and the Soviet government for the development of Siberian natural gas, its liquefaction, and its export to the United States. But whereas the old economic coercion policy could count on a supportive consensus, this new economic inducement strategy encountered strident and powerful opposition. Some of this conflict was fallout from the general "battle of the branches" incited by Vietnam and Watergate. Some pertained to the broader issue of linkage between any trade with the Soviets and their Jewish emigration policy. And some was specific to the energy trade issue itself. The cumulative result was a series of trade restrictions passed by Congress in 1974 which, while stopping short of the old economic coercion strategy, was enough to derail the Siberian gas ventures. During the Carter administration, policy went through various phases, with energy trade first being permitted (January 1977-July 1978), then suspended (July-September 1978), then promoted (September 1978-December 1979), and finally restricted (December 1979-January 1981). When Ronald Reagan came to power, the reversion to energy trade sanctions was complete. And as with others of its anti-Soviet actions and entreaties, the Reagan administration expected the old Cold War consensus to be reenergized. With a steadier, more inspirational hand at the helm, the American people would shake off the paralysis that had set in as a result of the Vietnam complex, the false illusions of detente, and the malaise of the Carter presidency. With effective leadership, congressional bipartisanship and deference to the president's lead beyond the water's edge would be resurrected. Interest groups would set aside their own particularistic concerns and give precedence to the overriding national interest. The whole country would rally round the flag and meet the Soviet threat head on. The reality, however, was quite different. Instead of mustering the old supportive consensus, the Reagan policy encountered substantial domestic opposition. One opinion poll showed even less support for the Reagan energy trade sanctions than the Carter grain embargo

The Constraints on America's Economic Coercive Power

had initially received. 11 Business lobbyists, who on other policies gave Reagan wholehearted support, put export controls close to the top of the list of issues on which they worked against him. Congress, far from becoming more bipartisan or more deferential, challenged the SNGP sanctions and then weakened new legislation proposed by the administration to expand presidential authority to wield the embargo stick in the future. The executive branch itself was split by bureaucratic warfare that reached such intensity as to be one of the main factors precipitating Secretary of State Alexander Haig's resignation in June 1982. Thus, as at the intra-alliance level, there is a need to explain the changes that have occurred in the American domestic politics of EastWest trade. What were the bases of the old pro-sanctions consensus? And why did it erode in the 1g8os? Of course, if one were to believe the rhetoric of Soviet leaders, these questions really didn't matter very much. The Soviets' economy, they have repeatedly claimed, is not vulnerable to capitalist world trade sanctions. George Ball, under secretary of state during the FOP controversy, recounts that Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin later "thanked" him for allegedly providing the impetus for the development of the Soviet wide-diameter pipe industry. 12 Similarly, the Soviet retort to the Reagan sanctions on the SNGP compressor stations was that their factories soon would "turn them out like blinis." 13 It is true that the Soviet Union does have greater capacity than most nation-states to neutralize the costs that can be imposed on it through economic sanctions. First, this vast country, after all, is endowed with enormous economic resources, not the least of which are its virtually bottomless reserves of oil and natural gas. Second, as a command economy the state is able, at least in theory, to allocate and reallocate resources in accordance with political priorities and objectives. Third, its imperial dominance of Eastern Europe allows it to a great extent to redirect the resources and economic plans of six other countries as necessary to meet its own needs. And fourth, because its "normal" economic posture with respect to the West has been one of semiautarky, it has been structurally less sensitive than more open economies to the denial effect of trade sanctions. 11 Initially the Carter sanctions registered 76% support; initial support for the Reagan sanctions was only 46% (Gallup Opinion Index, Report no. 174 Uanuary 1980], p. 8, and Report no. 203 [August 1982], p. 13). 12Personal interview, November 15, 1983, New York City. 13New York Times, July 20, 1982, p. Dt.

25

PIPELINE POLITICS

But while these traits have made the Soviet Union less vulnerable to economic sanctions than democratic political systems-consumer economies, they have not made it inherently and totally invulnerable. Ultimately, even with its vast resources, command structure, and imperial dominance, the Soviet Union also must face the fundamental autarkic dilemma of limited endowments of at least some key factors of production. This has been particularly the case in the Soviet energy sector. Despite Dobrynin's boasts, the Soviet wide-diameter pipe industry never did develop fully. Today, more than twenty years after the FOP embargo, the Soviets still rely heavily on Western imports for the technologically sophisticated wide-diameter pipe needed for their m 59; impact of, 73-75> 21516; and past economic disputes with West, 61-62; and trade agreement with Great Britain, 65 -historical role of, in sanctions cases: Cuba (1960), 35-36; Yugoslavia (1948), 35-36 -and lend-lease, 51-52 -and oil trade/FOP sanctions, 25; and historical disputes with Western oil companies, 102-3; impact of, 123-26, 215-16; and Italy, 92-94, III; and Khrushchev's oil offensive, 81-86; and 1959 Seven-Year Plan, 86-87, 97-98; and 1961 Vienna summit, 9697; and post-Stalin trade expansion, 79; Rostow assessment of, 126-27 -and SNGP, 25-26; and economic problems, 174-75, 178; and energy contracts with Western Europe, 185, 189-90, 193, 197-203; and high technology and credits, 178-83; impact of, 211-14, 216-17; and Poland, 20, 173, 175> 191-93> 203, 213, 235

Index -unilateral constraints on, 25-28, 50 United States: and Carter economic diplomacy, 24, 149-59; and CO_COM liberalizations, 76-81; domestic co~­ straints on, 41-49; and future pohcy, 232 _ 33 , 23 8-3g, 242-46; and Kennedy-Johnson trade liberaliz~tion, 126-31; multilateral constramts_on, 34 _ 41 ; objectives of, in economiC coercion, 28-31, 215 -and Cold War trade controls, 23, 215-16, 218, 233-34; and dom~stic politics, 54. 57-63; and _economiC coercion strategy, 51-57; Impact of, on USSR, 73-75; Western European collaboration in, 63-73 -and detente and economic inducement, 24, 132, 235; basic Nixon-Kissinger strategy of, 132-35; domestic constraints on, 142-49; and energy trade, 136-39. 141-42; Euro-Soviet, . 15Q-70 -and oil trade/FOP sanctions, 22-24, 216, ~;n8-1g, 234-35; impact of, on USSR, 123-25; and leverage on Great Britain, 118-23; and leverage on Italy, 94, 107-13; and leverage on West Germany, 113-18; and 1950 CIA analysis of Soviet oil sector, 82; and 1958 Commerce Del?artment study of wide-diameter pipe, 87-88: . and 1962 NSC decision, 104-5; polltlcal economy of U.S. opposition to, 94- 10 3 -and SNGP sanctions, 24-25, 216-17, 219_ 33 , 235 -43; conflict with Wes~­ ern Europe over, 183-203; domestic constraints on, 203-1 1; impact of, on USSR, 211-14; and Reagan strategy, . IQ-22, 172-83 U.S.-USSR Trade and Economic Council, 146 Vance, Cyrus, 151, 153 Vandenberg, Arthur H., 54• 59

Vanik, Charles, 143. See alm JacksonVanik Amendment Versailles summit (1982), 182, 193 Vietnam War, I34-35, 143, 144, 170, 239 Walesa, Lech, 236 Wall Street journal, 201, 228 Weinberger, Caspar, 177-78, 208, 210 Western Europe, 28, 32, 36-37, 58; and early Cold War trade controls, 59-61, 63-73, 75, 2I8; future policy of, 24346; and high-technology controls and credits, 178-83; and 1954 COCOM liberalization, 76-81; and 1970s detente and energy trade, 125, 159-70; and oil trade/FOP sanctions, 22, 23, 84-87, 216; and SNGP sanctions, 1Q21, 23, 172-75, 183-200, 206-7, 213-14, 216-23. See also entrzesfor individual countries West Germany: and early Cold War trade controls, 68; and energy producer/consumer distinction, 39· 9192, 100; future policy of, 221, 226, 228n, 230-31; and high-technolo~y controls, 184; and 1954 COCOM liberalization, 79-80; and 1970s det_ente and energy trade, 16o-6g; and ml trade/FOP sanctions, 22-23, 87-go, Q1, g8, 106, 113-18, _12I-23, 216, 219; and SNGP sanctiOns, 20-21, 182-86, 188-90, 192-93, I95-201, 203, 221 Wharton Econometrics, 106 Williamsburg summit (1983), 198-gg Wilson, Woodrow, 44-45 Yakutsk LNG project, 139, 140-41, 146-49 Yankelovich, Daniel, 237 Yergin, Daniel, 45 Young Americans for Freedom, 130 Yugoslavia, 35

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Jentleson, Bruce W., 1951Pipeline politics. (Cornell studies in political economy) Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Energy industries-Political aspects-Soviet Union. 2. Energy industries-Political aspects-Europe. 3· Europe-Foreign relationsSoviet Union. 4· Soviet Union-Foreign relations-Europe. 5· EuropeForeign relations-United States. 6. United States-Foreign relationsEurope. I. Title. II. Series. HD9502.S652]46 1986 382'-45621042'0947 86-47643 ISBN o-8o14-1923-9 (alk. paper)